Search Results - "Quartana, P J"

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  1. 1

    Selective prevention of combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder using attention bias modification training: a randomized controlled trial by Wald, I, Fruchter, E, Ginat, K, Stolin, E, Dagan, D, Bliese, P D, Quartana, P J, Sipos, M L, Pine, D S, Bar-Haim, Y

    Published in Psychological medicine (01-09-2016)
    “…Efficacy of pre-trauma prevention for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has not yet been established in a randomized controlled trial. Attention bias…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    0159 LABORATORY-BASED SLEEP RESTRICTION ENHANCES THE CORTISOL AWAKENING RESPONSE IN HEALTHY ADULTS by Lanlokun, OO, Yarnell, AM, Grillakis, AA, Quartana, PJ

    Published in Sleep (New York, N.Y.) (28-04-2017)
    “…Abstract Introduction: Sleep restriction is related to risk for stress-related symptoms and disease processes. The cortisol awakening response (CAR) is the…”
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  3. 3

    0273 Residual Sleep Difficulties During Reset Operations Predict Greater Post-Deployment Mental Health Difficulties in U.S. Soldiers: A Cross-Lagged Analysis by So, C J, Alfano, C A, Riviere, L A, Quartana, P J

    Published in Sleep (New York, N.Y.) (27-05-2020)
    “…Abstract Introduction Military service is associated with a number of occupational stressors, including non-conducive sleeping environments, shift schedules,…”
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  4. 4

    Anger management style moderates effects of attention strategy during acute pain induction on physiological responses to subsequent mental stress and recovery: a comparison of chronic pain patients and healthy nonpatients by Burns, John W, Quartana, Phillip J, Bruehl, Stephen

    Published in Psychosomatic medicine (01-05-2009)
    “…To examine whether high trait anger-out chronic low back (CLBP) patients would show exceptionally large symptom-specific lower paraspinal (LP) responses,…”
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  5. 5

    Gender, Neuroticism, and Emotional Expressivity: Effects on Spousal Constraints Among Individuals With Cancer by Quartana, Phillip J, Schmaus, Brian J, Zakowski, Sandra G

    “…The authors prospectively tested the hypothesis that emotional expressivity would moderate the predictive relationship between patient neuroticism and spousal…”
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